Workers at the Coles distribution warehouse at Eastern Creek, in Sydney鈥檚 western suburbs, have exposed how managers there put profits above their health and safety.
United Workers Union (UWU) delegate George told an August 3 UWU聽forum that they had to force management to take action to聽protect themselves against a possible COVID-19 outbreak on July 31.
鈥淎 team member was聽notified that some family members had tested positive for COVID on Saturday. He did the right thing by alerting management, and he was escorted off site straight away,鈥 George said.
鈥淭hey聽then聽got confirmation he had tested positive.
鈥淚 told the management we need to shut down the shed, alert our team members and delay the next shift, which was due to start at 3pm.
鈥淚t was 40 minutes to an hour until they told our team members [about the positive infection].
鈥淸Management]聽didn鈥檛 want to do it, but I got my point across and they ended the shift at 2pm.鈥
George said he stayed back 鈥渢o make sure everything was all right鈥.
Management organised for just two cleaners to come in to clean the shed. It took just half an hour to do a deep clean.
鈥淢anagement wanted to push the shift back to 4pm. I told them no way that can happen. If the workers get [COVID-19] they鈥檙e going to be taking it back to their families,鈥 George said.
When the UWU organiser and health and safety representatives arrived, management 鈥渟tarted taking things more seriously and brought in more cleaners鈥.
The workers refused to enter and eventually the shift was cancelled.
George criticised the lack of procedure as 鈥渄isgusting鈥.
Safety plan needed
鈥淸The company] should have had a plan, instead of making ridiculous calls on the spot. It was chaos.鈥
He also said workers needed to know how to be COVID-19 safe. 鈥淚t means the safety of yourself, your co-workers and your family. Be ready. Know your rights and don鈥檛 be afraid to take action.鈥
UWU organiser Sharon Burlings said Coles management wanted to open up 鈥渁t any cost鈥. 鈥淭hey refused me entry to do an inspection. But, luckily we had a good delegate and health and safety reps there.鈥
Tim Gunstone from the UWU NSW said even though the majority of COVID-19 infections are happening at work, employers are exerting pressure on workers 鈥渢o just keep working鈥.
鈥淚f at any time you consider you and your workmates are at risk, you have the right to stop work on paid time, under current occupational health and safety law,鈥 he said.
In addition to paid pandemic leave, Gunstone said the union was pushing for employees to be able to get tested. 鈥淲e can鈥檛 rely on employers to protect our health. They always put profit ahead of people.鈥
A call was made to all UWU members to immediately contact the union office using the COVID-19 Hotline in any case of a workplace infection.
Meanwhile, at the end of July, the UWU asked the NSW government to convene a crisis meeting with unions, employer representatives and Safework NSW. The union has proposed steps to prevent the rise in transmissions in distribution centres. The Berejiklian government is yet to respond.
UWU National Secretary Tim Kennedy said: 鈥淚t has become clear in Sydney that numbers are staying stubbornly high because people are going to work while infectious. This makes this an issue of workplace safety.鈥
Union offers help
The UWU聽wants the NSW government to take control of deploying rapid testing and vaccination at , to ensure employers are required to provide heightened protection for essential workers including adequate personal protective equipment and safety protocols to combat the highly infectious Delta variant.
The union is aware of at least seven sites in NSW where workers have been exposed to confirmed infections and have either not been contacted by NSW Health or have been given contradictory instruction to that of their employer.
On August 2, a worker at a PFD Food Services distribution centre in Chullora found out they were infectious. PFD was聽told at 10am the next day, but the company did not pass on that information聽to close contacts until the end of their shift, at 2pm.
The company instructed the workers to get tested and self isolate 鈥斅爑sing their annual leave.
The afternoon shift workers were told that they were not close contacts and therefore had to work.
The UWU believes there was a potential cross-over of the two shifts of around 30 minutes.
鈥淚n previous instances of high community spread, unions have worked with government authorities to help curb transmission,鈥 Kennedy said.
He said the government needed to listen to take advice from those who are currently most impacted 鈥斅犅爓orkers. 鈥淲e have OHS structures at many workplaces across NSW that can be activated in a state-wide strategy to protect people from the current Delta variant.鈥